Your peppers please!

Doomboy15

Well-Known Member
Pepper update:
I've already been getting into the peppers, even when they're still a bit green. I just can't help it.

Trinidad Scorpion
View attachment 4660943
View attachment 4660944
The heat was incredible
View attachment 4660945

A yellow habanero
View attachment 4660946
My cayenne
View attachment 4660947
View attachment 4660948
Help me identify this pepper.
Originally, we thought it would be Philippine pepper Siling Labuyo, my gf got the seeds from her cousin who got them from the old country.
I don't think it's the philippine cultivar (the pods are already much too big)
View attachment 4660949
It's just a small plant that I started late.
perhaps Tabasco?
View attachment 4660950
Kung pao peppers are them red ones
 

Doomboy15

Well-Known Member
Pepper update:
I've already been getting into the peppers, even when they're still a bit green. I just can't help it.

Trinidad Scorpion
View attachment 4660943
View attachment 4660944
The heat was incredible
View attachment 4660945

A yellow habanero
View attachment 4660946
My cayenne
View attachment 4660947
View attachment 4660948
Help me identify this pepper.
Originally, we thought it would be Philippine pepper Siling Labuyo, my gf got the seeds from her cousin who got them from the old country.
I don't think it's the philippine cultivar (the pods are already much too big)
View attachment 4660949
It's just a small plant that I started late.
perhaps Tabasco?
View attachment 4660950
20200815_195026.jpg
 

blueberryrose

Well-Known Member
No kidding? And all this time I thought they were cayennes, having grown these from seed several years now. The seeds from these came from pods I grew 2 years ago, last year I didn't grow these ones.

I did a cross where I pollinated them with a big, sturdy, productive chocolate habanero (store bought plant). Here is the pod with the same little envelope still on it after I had done the pollination.

red1.jpg
Here is a better look at it
red2.jpg
They are tasty too. There's a bit of heat, with these that make the lips tingle for some time after eating them, but not with burn of a chinense cultivar.
The seeds are really nice, I'll probably pop some soon after they've dried enough and see what it turns out like inside :fire:
 

blueberryrose

Well-Known Member
Brrr, it's starting to cool off already. Curse this Eastern Ontario weather!
(time to start harvesting the ripe ones to give the green ones a chance)

Golden habs, chocolate habs, what I used to think was cayenne but may be kung pao, and trinidad scorpions.
20200830_174853.jpg
All my reapers and scotch bonnets are still green. Also still a ways away from being ripe are the scotch brainstrain orange and numex bigjim. Plus my other mystery pepper which may be tabasco.
 

GreenhouseGreen

Well-Known Member
3 gal fabric pots with Jalapenos, Tabascos, and Golden Cayennes. Hopefully I'll be able to successfully overwinter these guys and have plants closer in size to some of the ones on this thread. Maybe move them up to 7 gal fabric pots next year. When I was a kid I remember us having a Tabasco bush the size of me that produced every year in our backyard. Maybe I can try planting it straight in the ground and try this here? I'm in a different zone 10 than I was as a kid. Still a zone 10, though.

The leaf damage was due to a real struggle I had with White Moth Caterpillars. They're still a problem but BT made them only a slight problem instead of the huge problem they were.

20200913_102511.jpg20200913_102524.jpg20200913_102527.jpg

Anyone familiar with whatever happened to this one cayenne? Not sure if it was something I did wrong or if it just happens.

20200913_102534.jpg
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
I'm satisfied with my peppers this year. They got off to a slow start but came around. I had to stake most of the plants up because they were falling over from all the fruit. I don't know what I'm going to do with it all. I've been picking green peppers for awhile. Usually I have people over for just visits and grilling and barbecues and they take some home but this year not a single social gathering so I have way more than I can use.

I've had the dehydrator going for days drying tomatoes. I think I'm going to do a batch of green peppers to use later in soups and stuff. I'm making jerk marinade out of the habaneros which can be frozen and some Nam Pla Prik, Prik Namsom, and Nam Som Prik Dong with the Thai chili's that I'll put in small jars and refrigerate. Those condiments will last a 2 - 3 weeks but the Nam Som Prik Dong will last for months. The rest of the Thai chili's I'll freeze whole for later use if I have enough.

Some of my peppers. I crammed them in so I have several of each except just 1 habanero and Thai.

Green




Yellow that haven't turned yellow



Jalapeno



Habanero



Thai

 

farmingfisherman

Well-Known Member
I'm satisfied with my peppers this year. They got off to a slow start but came around. I had to stake most of the plants up because they were falling over from all the fruit. I don't know what I'm going to do with it all. I've been picking green peppers for awhile. Usually I have people over for just visits and grilling and barbecues and they take some home but this year not a single social gathering so I have way more than I can use.

I've had the dehydrator going for days drying tomatoes. I think I'm going to do a batch of green peppers to use later in soups and stuff. I'm making jerk marinade out of the habaneros which can be frozen and some Nam Pla Prik, Prik Namsom, and Nam Som Prik Dong with the Thai chili's that I'll put in small jars and refrigerate. Those condiments will last a 2 - 3 weeks but the Nam Som Prik Dong will last for months. The rest of the Thai chili's I'll freeze whole for later use if I have enough.

Some of my peppers. I crammed them in so I have several of each except just 1 habanero and Thai.

Green




Yellow that haven't turned yellow



Jalapeno



Habanero



Thai

Looking good. Our Jimmy Nardello's are doing great and our red bells are actually turning red.
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Got a nice video, share with you
I've watched some videos from that guy. What I like about them is that they just use basic methods for growing. Nothing fancy. Just basic fertilizer epsom salts and what I found interesting is he sprays his plants with aspirin. Something I might look into next season. Great success using basic stuff. The same methods apply to cannabis. In fact getting a successful harvest of peppers is likely more difficult than growing cannabis.

But by growing with the KISS method "keep it simple stupid" and no I'm not calling anyone stupid, he gets great results. Too bad new cannabis growers can't understand that.

Edit:

"new cannabis growers" should be "all growers"
 
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farmingfisherman

Well-Known Member
Our peppers received a much needed bath this morning. Tomatoes i'm afraid have all mostly split because of the shower. Oh well I'll take spit tomatoes over fires and smokey air any day of the week!
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Hurricane Sally's effects on my peppers.View attachment 4687683
View attachment 4687683
That just sucks. Not much else I can say.

Our peppers received a much needed bath this morning. Tomatoes i'm afraid have all mostly split because of the shower. Oh well I'll take spit tomatoes over fires and smokey air any day of the week!
I was out in the rain early picking tomatoes before they split. Some already had. Some of the cherry tomatoes split so much they're ready for the dehydrator. No need to slice in half.
 
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